Online Optical Illusions Archives - Dr. KarenTurnerPhD https://karenturnerphd.org/tag/online-optical-illusions/ Dr. KarenTurnerPhD Wed, 06 Sep 2023 16:55:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://karenturnerphd.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/cropped-Karen-Turner-logo-32x32.png Online Optical Illusions Archives - Dr. KarenTurnerPhD https://karenturnerphd.org/tag/online-optical-illusions/ 32 32 Effect of After-Image and Online Optical Illusion https://karenturnerphd.org/effect-of-after-image-and-online-optical-illusion/ Wed, 06 Sep 2023 16:51:35 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5722   Online optical illusions result from varying artificially constructed factors as well as resulting from imperfections in the optical system. One of these features that contributes to the development…

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Online optical illusions result from varying artificially constructed factors as well as resulting from imperfections in the optical system. One of these features that contributes to the development of online optical illusions is the after-image effect. Psychological articles explain the ‘After image’ as the effects wherein the eyes continue seeing an object even after you have stopped looking at the object. The after-image effect enables the formation of many magical online optical illusions.

The formation of American flag is a popular online optical illusion incorporating the after-image effect. Take a look at the above picture.

It may be really surprising to find that yes, this online optical illusion will create the American Flag. We’ll show you how this happens utilizing after-images to create the red white and blue impression of the American flag.

Where is the American Flag?

The American flag is right here, in this online optical illusion. Fix your sight at the border between the yellow box and the strips in this image for about 20 seconds. If you still do not see the American flag, shift your vision to a white surface. You will find the American flag there, with red and white strips and white stars in a blue rectangle. It appears as an after-image of the original flag. Ok, baby boomers. We think you’ll agree this is a really a cool online optical illusion and we’re happy to use this psychological article to explain how this works.

Why did the color changed in the after-image?

In this online optical illusion, the colors change from cyan to red, black to white, and yellow to blue. According to psychological articles, the photoreceptive cells in the retina become less responsive to a particular color as you stare at it for a period of time. When the after-image is formed, the object is projected in the complementary color of the original color. In the current online optical illusion, red, white, and blue are the complementary colors of cyan, black, and yellow respectively. Hence, you see the American flag in the after-image.

Boomer Yearbook has brought you many other online optical illusions such as The “Face of Jesus” and ” Bird and Cage”, online optical illusions based on the after-image effect.

This Psychological Article on Online Optical Illusions is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of out of the ordinary suggestions on how to alleviate elderly problems and keep our brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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HOW SMART IS YOUR RIGHT FOOT? https://karenturnerphd.org/how-smart-is-your-right-foot/ Tue, 05 Sep 2023 11:17:31 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5409   HOW SMART IS YOUR RIGHT FOOT? You have to try this please, it takes2 seconds. I could not believe this!It is from an orthopedic surgeon. This will…

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HOW SMART IS YOUR RIGHT FOOT?

You have to try this please, it takes
2 seconds. I could not believe this!
It is from an orthopedic surgeon.

This will boggle your mind and you will
keep trying over and over again to see
if you can outsmart your foot,
but, you can’t.

It’s pre-programmed in your brain!

1. Without anyone watching you
(they will think you are GOOFY….)
and while sitting at your desk in
front of your computer, lift your
right foot off the floor and make
clockwise circles.

2. Now, while doing this, draw the
number ‘6’ in the air with your right
hand. Your foot will change direction.

I told you so!!! And there’s nothing you
can do about it! You and I both know how
stupid it is, but before the day is done
you are going to try it again, if you’ve
not already done so.

Psychological Articles Explaining Brain Coordination

by BoomerYearbook.com

A silly little trick has been circulating throughout the cyber world for some time, similar to trying to pat your head and rub your stomach, but this one involves the coordinating movements of your hands and feet. The foot trick goes something like this: While sitting upright in a chair, lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles. Then, while making clockwise circles with your right foot, draw the number 6 in the air with your right hand. The catch is to try to keep your right foot moving in a clockwise direction while drawing the ‘6’ in the air. It is very difficult, if not impossible for some. So, what’s the deal? Read on. This psychological article will explain.

There is a plausible explanation for the challenge to move your foot in a clockwise direction while making a counter-clockwise motion with your hand. The difficulty is not limited to hand/foot coordination. Try this other little muscle coordination test (this one is off the cuff): hold both arms out in front of you, bent at the elbow (hand should be pointed up, palms facing one another). First, move your right arm in forward circle. Once you have your right arm moving forward, move your left arm in backward circles simultaneously. Can you do it? Accurately? Keeping your movements in circles? (Yeah, right. No one was looking as you were reading this psychological article explanation, so who is going to challenge you?)

If you cannot, no matter how hard you try, make your arms and legs move in opposite directions you are not alone. According to a psychological article by David Rosenbaum, Penn State University, published in November/December Journal of Experimental Psychology, your brain is programmed a certain way. The psychological article explains that the brain is the sophisticated wiring that controls our muscle movements. Because of how we are programmed, the brain naturally has more trouble coordinating movements that are in different directions, or non-isodirectional. Why? you ask. Give that question some thought. Do you more often need to use your limbs in conjunction with one another or in contradiction to one another? Here are a few activities that you may have participated in recently, or at least observed, that will demonstrate coordinated muscle movements: 1) riding a bicycle. Do your legs move in the same direction or opposite directions? If they moved in opposite directions you would never move from square one; 2) swinging a bat. Both arms must move together; 3) folding clothes. The actions are mirror images, but are still in the same direction. Also, do not confuse ‘opposite’ with ‘alternating’. Although some of our movements may alternate, they are still in the same direction. It came on our respective mental hard-drives, luckily.

And why does all of this matter? There have been numerous psychological articles that have reported studies that tested the effects of stroke on motor coordination. The general consensus is that non-isodirectional movements are difficult under normal circumstances. For stroke patients, both isodirectional and non-isodirectional movements are compromised not only on the lesioned brain hemisphere but also on the “unaffected” hemisphere. The conclusion is that both the left and right hemispheres are needed for coordinated muscle movements. When a person suffers a stroke, regardless of the side in which the stroke occurred, the synchronization of motor control movements is negatively affected.

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Is Your Brain Deficient or Efficient? A Fun Baby Boomer Assessment https://karenturnerphd.org/is-your-brain-deficient-or-efficient-a-fun-baby-boomer-assessment/ Tue, 05 Sep 2023 09:11:47 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5291   Count every ‘F’ in the following text: FINISHED FILES ARE THE RESULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTIFIC STUDY COMBINED WITHTHE EXPERIENCE OF YEARS… How many did you count…

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Count every ‘F’ in the following text:

FINISHED FILES ARE THE RE
SULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTI
FIC STUDY COMBINED WITH
THE EXPERIENCE OF YEARS…

How many did you count on your first go? Three, four, or more? There are actually six ‘F’s in the ‘finished files’ phrase. The “trick” attached to this Online Optical Illusion teaser is that it is difficult to locate all of ‘F’s on first glance. The reasoning behind it is varied. The text that accompanies this online optical illusion/brain game tells the participant that “the brain cannot process ‘of’”. Well, we all know that is hardly true. We read the word ‘of’ quite often. The brain is perfectly capable of processing any combination of letters, whether ‘real’ words or ‘nonsense’ words. Early literacy testing consists of having children read combinations of letters in a timed assessment, and they do not come to a screeching halt when they reach the word ‘of’. (The word ‘of’ appeared 10 times in this first paragraph. Now 11. Did your brain see them?)

What is actually happening is your brain’s instinctive ability to screen information for its importance and pass on by what it has decided your complicated world can do without. We have learned when we scan text for content that we can make sense of the words by filtering out the ‘unimportant’ words like a, an, the, of, and so on. It is an efficient little trick our brains have developed to focus our time and energy on the important stuff. If we spend our time on each and every incoming message we would never get through the day; and if we did, we wouldn’t be sane.

Sorting out information and categorizing it as relevant or irrelevant can be used for fun, like online optical illusions and brain games, but it can also be used to study the effects of aging. What has been discovered in the baby boomer population is that as people age, their ability to focus on important information while ignoring unimportant information becomes increasingly strained. Alzheimer’s and dementia patients show similar characteristics in behavior, particularly at the end of the day. What has been happening is that their brains have been running on overload all day trying desperately to manage the overwhelming amount of information they are receiving. Because their brains are already compromised with mental illness, they are simply not able to cope by the end of the day. Hence, the “sundowning” effect reported by health professionals and family members.

Although we may not necessarily be able to prevent certain forms of dementia, there are some suggestions to help redirect our attention and help us focus on the important information we come into contact with in the course of the day. As stated in a March 19, 2007 article on Forbes.com entitled “Gaming’s Health Benefits”, one way to help you tune out the sensory static is to give your brain a workout by playing online optical illusions and brain games. But baby boomers be warned, as six hours of PlayStation every day won’t help you ward off dementia. It’s the brain teasers such as the online opitical illusions and psychological games found on Boomer Yearbook that will keep your brain at its best well into your Golden Years.

Now that you know where to find these games and online optical illusions, there’s only one thing left to do:

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Online Optical Illusion Based on Size https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-based-on-size/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 18:24:30 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5105   In the wide range of online optical illusions available on the Web, many of them are based on the relative size of the visual elements in a visual frame.…

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In the wide range of online optical illusions available on the Web, many of them are based on the relative size of the visual elements in a visual frame. The perception of the visual elements is not an independent action. We perceive a visual element in connection with other visual elements. The same is true for online optical illusions. Psychological and Neuropsychological articles suggest that an object appears larger when placed with smaller objects and vice versa. This phenomenon has been incorporated into online optical illusions and has fun, amazing effects.

Comparison of Two Circles

Comparisons of geometrical figures are very popular online optical illusions found on the Web.

Figure 1 shows an online optical illusion that compares two circles surrounded by circles of different size.

Figure 1

Figure 1

In this online optical illusion, black circles of smaller sizes surround one white circle while bigger black circles surround another circle. When we look at this online optical illusion, the white circle surrounded by smaller back circles looks bigger than the circle surrounded by bigger black circles. But, are you sure that the size of these white circles are different? You will be surprised to know that these circles are actually same in size. Is it hard to believe? Then, draw a diameter of each of these circles and measure the length. You will find that your eyes are deceiving you. The truth is they are the same size.

The same effect holds true in other geometrical figures as well.

Comparison of two lines

Figure 2 shows an online optical illusion with two vertical lines of same size. However, when you look at this image, your brain perceives the vertical line on the right to be longer. It is due to the smaller space within the two horizontal lines as compared to that of the vertical line in the left.

Figure 2

Figure 2

This visual effect is used in many online optical illusions to trick the human eye. You can also easily create an online optical illusion of your own using this visual effect.

This Psychological Article on Online Optical Illusions is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of out of the ordinary suggestions on how to alleviate elderly problems and keep our brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

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Online Optical Illusion Due to Retinal Rivalry https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-due-to-retinal-rivalry/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 18:15:39 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5097   The human eyes are very complex in both their structure and function. This complexity often leads to the creation of optical illusions, including online optical illusions. The retinas…

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The human eyes are very complex in both their structure and function. This complexity often leads to the creation of optical illusions, including online optical illusions. The retinas of the two eyes act as two independent monocular fields. These fields try to gain supremacy over each other. There are numerous online optical illusions based on this rivalry between an individual’s two eyes.

Online optical illusions formed based on this rivalry are more apparent when there are two or more objects of different colors in the visual field. The focus of the eyes keeps fluctuating from one color to another due to the rivalry of the retinas. As a result of this fluctuation, the brain perceives a kind of movement from one color to another and sees static elements of different colors in motion. Many online optical illusions incorporate this feature to stun the human eye; such as the above online optical illusion example.

What do you notice in this online optical illusion? At first glance, you will see that the circles made of white, blue, and red colors appear to revolve. Now, take a closer look at each element independently. They are actually static elements. The movement of the circle in this online optical illusion is just a visual trick.

The trick to making this online optical illusion appear to be moving lies in the rivalry between the two retinas of the eyes. The focus keeps fluctuating from one color to another due to the rivalry creating a motion from one color to another; thus making the circles appear to revolve. Additionally, the contrast of the yellow and gray backgrounds also aids in producing the revolving effect in this online optical illusion.

It is easy to incorporate this visual feature in numerous online optical illusions. The scope of what you can create is endless. You can use this feature to make the motion of the illusion appear to move center to outward or to make wavy online optical illusions. Now that you know the trick. Enjoy!

This Psychological Article on Online Optical Illusions is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of out of the ordinary suggestions on how to alleviate elderly problems and keep our brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

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 Online Optical Illusion: Hermann Grid https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-hermann-grid/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 17:29:05 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5083   Contrast is an important element that contributes to the formation of online optical illusions. The Hermann Grid is one of the most popular optical illusions that is based…

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Contrast is an important element that contributes to the formation of online optical illusions. The Hermann Grid is one of the most popular optical illusions that is based on the element of contrast. In the Hermann Grid, the effect of contrast produces an illusion of a new color apart from the original colors forming the grid.

Look at this online optical illusion and try to count the number of colors in the grid. How many colors do you see? You will see two colors distinctly; white and black. Do you also see gray colors at each of the intersections?

Now focus your sight at each intersection. Do you still see the gray colors? Surprisingly, the gray colors have vanished. The gray colors that appear at the intersections are not really present there. They are actually illusions.

What is the Scientific Reason of Hermann Grid online optical illusion?

The gray colors in this online optical illusion are due to the adjustment of brightness of an image on the eye’s retinal cells. The near-center of the retina has the highest resolution vision while the periphery has lower resolution vision. In the periphery of the retina, the brightness of the image is reduced significantly producing the graying effect in online optical illusions.

Explaining Hermann Grid Online Optical Illusion

In the Hermann Grid online optical illusion, when you focus your sight exactly at the intersections, the image falls at the near-center of the retina. Hence, you see the exact color, which is white. You also see the white colors between the black squares as exactly the same because the brightness is balanced between the white and the black areas. However, when you do not look at the intersections, but at the image as a whole, (the Gestalt of the image) the image of the intersections fall to the periphery of the eye’s retina. This results in a decrease in the brightness of the area. Hence, you see gray colors at the intersections in this online optical illusion. Fascinating, isn’t it?

This Psychological Article on Online Optical Illusions is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of out of the ordinary suggestions on how to alleviate elderly problems and keep our brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

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Online Optical Illusion: Experience and Perception https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-experience-and-perception/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 17:21:11 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5077   To a very great extent, our visual sense is not “objective” in that there is not a perfect one to one ratio between what we see and…

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To a very great extent, our visual sense is not “objective” in that there is not a perfect one to one ratio between what we see and how we make sense of what we see. In fact, oftentimes our brain interprets what our eyes perceive based not solely on the visual stimuli we are looking at but on our cognitions and experiences.
(http://boomeryearbook.com/blog/2009/03/15/psychological-article-types-of-online-optical-illusions/)

Many online optical illusions capitalize on this common miscommunication between our eyes and our brains, and use it to create online optical illusions; especially of the Cognitive type. Thus, when looking at an online optical illusion, the human brain takes in the visual stimuli and then connects it to past cognitions and experiences, matching the stimuli to our cultural and experiential “Gestalt”, In other words, perceiving the online optical illusion in the context of what is familiar and previously stored in our brains as meaningfully recognizable.

One of the classical online optical illusions that illustrates this example is the “Message of Love from the Dolphins” by Swiss artist Sandro Del-Prete.

Hmmm. What do you see? Well, before jumping to judgmental conclusions about this online optical illusion, it’s important to know that psychological articles inform us that adults see something very different than does the typical child.

If you are an adult, you will probably see two individuals in an intimate position in this online optical illusion. That is all right. Most adults will see the same. It is because you have prior knowledge of what lovemaking is. However, I have to disappoint you. In fact, this image is not of two individuals in an intimate position.

Psychological articles advise us to perform this little experiment. Ask some small children with no knowledge of lovemaking to tell you what they see in this online optical illusion. Will they perceive the image as adults do? Psychological articles tell us the answer is no. In fact, they see nine dolphins in a bottle on this online optical illusion. You may be surprised but it is true. Take another good look to this online optical illusion to find the nine dolphins.

Have you found the nine dolphins in this online optical illusion? If not, let me suggest that you concentrate on the black spots within the picture that you perceived to be human figures.

When you look at this online optical illusion, you perceived the image in connection with your prior knowledge that is within your realm of familiar experiences.

However, for a kid, this online optical illusion is just a school of dolphins in a bottle because they do not have any knowledge about the intimate position.

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Online Optical Illusion: Effect of Color https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-effect-of-color/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 17:13:49 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5070 Color has a profound impact in the creation of online optical illusions. Light rays from sources of different colors have different wavelengths. After passing through the lens of the…

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Color has a profound impact in the creation of online optical illusions. Light rays from sources of different colors have different wavelengths. After passing through the lens of the eye, the differences in the wavelengths of these rays results in differences in focal points. Online optical illusions frequently incorporate this property of light to trick the viewer’s eye into seeing what is actually not present. A wide range of online optical illusions are available that make use of color in order to create the deceiving visual optical illusion.

One of the most commonly seen online optical illusions is the fading away of a particular color when placed in or around another prominent color.

To see the trick in this online optical illusion, look at the blue dot without any eye movement or movement of the head. What do you see? Keep looking and you will see the blue dot gradually disappearing. Some people find the blue dot in this online optical illusion disappearing rapidly, while others take a little longer.

Psychological articles attribute this phenomenon to the difference in wavelengths of the rays of light; making some colors appear to advance forward while others appear to retire or retreat into the background. Generally, colors with longer wavelengths, such as red, orange, and yellow, are advancing colors. Alternately, colors with shorter wavelengths, such as violet, blue and green, are retiring colors. When two colors with difference in wavelengths are placed together, the color with the shorter wavelength will be retiring while the other will be advancing.

In the present online optical illusion, the light coming from the blue dot is of shorter wavelength than that of the green circle. Hence, the blue dot appears to fade away in this online optical illusion.

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 Online Optical Illusion: The Hidden Image https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-the-hidden-image/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 16:50:43 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5060   Online optical illusion tricks are ever evolving with the quick succession of new and amazing images. The creators of these online optical illusions use various visual features to make an…

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Online optical illusion tricks are ever evolving with the quick succession of new and amazing images. The creators of these online optical illusions use various visual features to make an impact on the audience. In any of the online optical illusion tricks, you will find the ploy of contrast, color, depth, brightness, or position to provide the desire effect.

Online Optical Illsusions

Online Optical Illsusions

The given figure illustrates a very popular online optical illusion.

What do you see in this online optical illusion?

At first sight, you will see some black and white spots on a black background. If you are enterprising and really trying, you may also see the outline of a human head. However, can you exactly describe what the image is all about? Let’s perform a simple exercise to find out.

1. Concentrate on the black spots in the middle for 30-40 seconds.
2. Then fix your vision on a smooth surface, preferably white surface. You find a circle of light develops around your vision.
3. Blink your eyes a couple of time to see an image emerging.

What do you see? Rather, whom do you see?

Try out the steps to find an amazing image appearing from seemingly nowhere!

In this online optical illusion, ‘contrast of brightness’ or irradiation, is the optical feature that is creating the trick. Psychological articles suggest that the effect of irradiation, when factors of contrasts in brightness make the apparent enlargement of a bright object when viewed against a dark background, plays an important role in forming online optical illusions.

In the current online optical illusion, the visual excitation is spread over the border of the retina rapidly beyond the border of the stimulated region. With the impact of the stimulating light, the hidden image in this online optical illusion appears; therefore the contrast between dark and light, when juxtaposed next to each other, intensified the visual effect. (http://www.visualillusion.net/Chap08/Page01.php)

Creators of online optical illusions can use ‘contrast’ as it has a great effect in playing tricks on the audiences eyes. You can find the role of ‘contrast’ in many online optical illusions, including both monochromatic and polychromatic pictures. The more online optical illusions you view, the easier it becomes to see the effect. So, we at Boomer Yearbook hope you will take the time and enjoy our online optical illusions and expanlations.

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 Online Optical Illusion: The Hidden Tiger https://karenturnerphd.org/online-optical-illusion-the-hidden-tiger/ Sat, 02 Sep 2023 16:43:21 +0000 https://karenturnerphd.org/?p=5054   Do you believe the statement “The first impression is the last impression” is true? Think again. There are various online optical illusions that will prove this quote wrong. When…

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Do you believe the statement “The first impression is the last impression” is true? Think again. There are various online optical illusions that will prove this quote wrong. When individuals look at an image, they try to perceive it in relationship to something that is most closely related to something they have experienced before. Psychological articles tell us that banking on this nature, creators of online optical illusions have created various illusions to play trick on the viewers.

The ‘The Hidden Tiger’ is one of those online optical illusions that tricks the human eye based on the way the human organizes visual sensory input.

What is your first impression of this online optical illusion? Your first impression may be that it is a picture of a tiger in the woods. You will also see the trees and the grasses. This is where our first impression can prove to be deceptive or incomplete.

Take another look. Do you see anything else? To be more precise, do you see ‘The Hidden Tiger’ in this online optical illusion? Take a closer look and try to find ‘The Hidden Tiger.’

If you still cannot find ‘The Hidden Tiger’, look closely at the tiger’s stripes. Can you now see the ‘The Hidden Tiger’ in this online optical illusion?. Most probably yes. Are you wondering how you missed it in the first trial? Well, you are far from alone and there is nothing to worry about. The majority of people looking at this oonline optical illusion tend to see the “whole” of the big tiger, not the hidden tiger as the way we perceive something is based on matching the perception of the new stimuli and generalizing it to something familiar of which we have stored prior knowledge.

Taking a first look at this online optical illusion of ‘The Hidden Tiger’ demonstrates that first impressions are seldom true; they are more accurately based on past perceptions and not just current stimuli. Thus the human brain’s way of generalizing sensory information provides the source of online optical illusion tricks, and encourages us to take a closer look at what we see in the world around us.

So, after “reframing” how you look at this online optical illusion, do you still believe the statement “The first impression is the last impression” is true? We at Boomer Yearbook would love to encourage you to look again.

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